SciTrek was incorporated in 1982, with an initial grant from the Metropolitan Foundation. The Metropolitan Foundation is a nonprofit corporation guided by a 31-member board of directors headed by Robert W. Scherer, the Georgia Power Co. chairman and chief executive officer.

With help from the city of Atlanta, the city committed 96,000 square feet of the Atlanta Civic Center exhibition space to the Science and Technology Museum of Atlanta. The Robert W. Woodruff Foundation donated $1 million. After years of planning and fundraising SciTrek-The Science & Technology Museum of Atlanta finally opened its doors to the public on October 29, 1988.[3]

SciTrek opened with 34 staffers, 150 volunteers, and a $2.5 million annual budget. During the three-day grand opening, 11,000 visitors toured the museum. By the end of its first full fiscal year, Scitrek reported 350,000 visitors to the museum. Museum organizers projected attendance would eventually reach 1 million.

In 1991 SciTrek reported more than 750,000 visitors walked through its doors, most of whom were schoolchildren. In April 1997, Gwen Crider, former deputy director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, replaced Gene Brandt as president and executive director of SciTrek. In the October 2001 issue of Good Housekeeping magazine SciTrek was named one of the country's 10 best science museums.

Even after suffering a 24 percent drop-off in visitors between 1993 through 1999, SciTrek decided during the 1999 fiscal year to retire its long-standing debt of $3 million. On December 1, 2000 Lewis A. Massey, former Georgia secretary of state, took over as SciTrek president and chief executive officer.[3]

By January 2001 SciTrek's finances were in dire condition, having bled $80,000 to $100,000 a month over the previous six months. The museum had a deficit for the previous three years, reaching $700,000 for fiscal 2000. The board extended a 90-day reprieve for SciTrek instead of closing it down immediately. By June 2001 the State of Georgia, which has provided an annual $175,000 grant to SciTreck, threw in an additional $300,000 to help keep the museum afloat. During August 2002 the following year the Georgia Assembly allocated $425,000 to SciTrek and began a capital campaign to help raise $5 million.

January 2003, The Challenger Learning Center, a $1.7 million simulated space shuttle mission opened to the public. December 2003, SciTrek named technology industry executive Scott Coleman as president and CEO, replacing Massey, who left to join a lobbying firm. During June 2003, the State of Georgia Department of Education budget for the 2004 fiscal year cuts funding for SciTrek by 10 percent.[3]

SciTrek's Challenger Learning Center is a $1.7 million simulated NASA space shuttle mission program which opened to the public January 2003. Upon SciTrek's initial closure The Challenger Learning Center was put up for auction. Several museums and science centers expressed interest in acquiring the Challenger Learning Center for their facility. None of the entrusted facilities or museums were able to come up with the purchasing cost of $1.7 million. As a result Challenger Learning Center comprising advanced computers and flight technology was almost sent to the scrap yard.

Turner Broadcasting System stepped in and raised the money needed to purchase SciTrek's Challenger Learning Center, which was relocated and donated to Atlanta's Fernbank Science Center. SciTrek's name, intellectual property, computers, materials from the Edison exhibit, science education curriculum and programs were transferred to Valdosta State University in 2005. The new SciTrek is closed to the public, but serves as an educational center for teachers and students in South Georgia.[4]

STARS: SciTrek Amateur Radio Society operated W4WOW,the Amateur Radio Station located in SciTrek. STARS operated on CW, SSB, FM, and PSK-32 frequencies along with others. The frequency bands most often used by the group were HF, UHF, and VHF.

When SciTrek was in operation the group met on the first Sunday of every month at the Ham Radio Station in the Museum at 1 PM.[5]